In December 2012, a Manhattan federal court jury found Chiasson and former Diamondback Capital portfolio manager Todd Newman guilty of illegally trading Dell and Nvidia stock on inside information.

An appeals court later overturned those convictions, saying the two hedgies were so far removed from the original leak they could not have known whether the tipsters received a benefit, a key ingredient to prove the crime.

The Supreme Court refused to hear Uncle Sam’s appeal.

Aurmedis is the Chiasson’s second hedge fund. He ran Level Global from 2003 until it was closed in 2011 following an FBI raid tied to the insider trading probe.

Aurmedis registered with the SEC in September but was only managing private funds, which are not subject to the same disclosure rules as hedge funds.

The new fund’s name is a portmanteau of the Latin words for “gold” and “mean,” representing “golden mean.”

“For Aurmedis Global Investors, the ‘golden mean’ is symbolic of the firm’s balancing of its research and risk management processes,” an Aurmedis spokesperson told The Post.